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49 posts tagged with "singapore"

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Make-Up Pay for NSMen

· 6 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Make-up pay sounds straightforward until real employment arrangements get involved.

If you are salaried, you want to know whether the figure is correct. If you do shift work or variable pay, you worry about whether the amount reflects reality. If you are self-employed, freelance, platform-based, or between jobs, the process can feel much blurrier than the simple summary people repeat.

The useful way to understand make-up pay is not as one neat rule. It is as a few common pathways depending on how you earn.

Illustrated pay admin banner with a payslip, wallet, and stacked coins.

Exit Permit for NSMen: 5 Overseas Study and Work Scenarios Explained

· 6 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Exit Permit gets confusing because most people hear three versions at once:

  • the old version from someone older
  • the panic version from group chats
  • the current official rule

The easiest way to make sense of it is not by memorising random statements. It is by understanding the thresholds and then testing them against real situations.

Illustrated ORNS admin banner with a kit bag, call-up calendar, and document card.

IPPT and NS FIT Birthday Window Guide

· 5 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Most NSMen do not get confused by the IPPT or NS FIT window because the rule is advanced. They get confused because the wording sounds more abstract than it really is.

So here is the plain-English version: your annual window is basically your birthday-to-birthday year. Once that clicks, the rest becomes much easier to plan.

The real value is not just understanding the rule. It is realising how that rule affects when you should test, when NS FIT becomes useful, and why so many people end up feeling "suddenly rushed."

Illustrated IPPT planning banner with a track, stopwatch, and calendar.

Your First ICT After ORD: The 72-Hour Checklist Before You Book In

· 5 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Your first ICT after ORD does not usually feel hard because the military side is mysterious. It feels hard because civilian life is now mixed into the equation.

You are juggling work, family plans, missing gear, unread notifications, and the suspicion that your No. 4 may no longer fit the way it used to. That is why the first ICT often feels harder in the build-up than it looks on paper.

The easiest fix is to stop treating it like one big problem and handle it as a short prep window with clear categories.

Illustrated ORNS admin banner with a kit bag, call-up calendar, and document card.

Stay-In Survival System for NSFs

· 4 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Stay-in life gets easier the moment you stop treating every week like a surprise.

The people who look the least stressed are usually not naturally more organised or more garang. They just built small repeatable systems early: where things go, when laundry happens, what gets charged, and how Sunday packing works before panic starts.

If camp life currently feels like one long cycle of "eh where is my stuff," you do not need a personality transplant. You need a default routine.

Illustrated recruit banner with a camp locker, weekly checklist, and bag.

Report Sick in Camp and Submit MC on OneNS

· 6 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

The most annoying part of reporting sick is often not the illness. It is the admin around it.

Problems usually happen because someone disappears before informing the unit, assumes the MC alone settles everything, or forgets the OneNS follow-through entirely. The good news is that the low-drama version is very repeatable.

Inform early, follow the correct medical route, keep the paperwork, and close the admin loop before you switch off.

Illustrated medical admin banner with a referral note, service card, and health icon.

Posting After BMT: First Week Guide

· 6 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Posting day feels like one short message with far too much power.

One moment you are still mentally in BMT. The next moment, everyone is refreshing group chats, trying to decode unit names, and comparing postings like the whole next two years can be judged in ten minutes.

The most useful move is not to panic or celebrate too early. It is to read carefully, pack sensibly, and treat the first week as an information-gathering phase.

Illustrated recruit banner with a camp locker, weekly checklist, and bag.

First Book-Out Reality Check

· 5 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Your first book-out looks incredible in your head.

You imagine real food, proper sleep, a long shower, and a weekend that feels like freedom. Then the actual version arrives: your body is wrecked, your bag needs sorting, family and friends want your time, and Sunday night shows up much faster than it has any right to.

The recruits who enjoy first book-out the most are usually not the ones who squeeze in the most plans. They are the ones who recover first and reset properly.

Illustrated recruit banner with a camp locker, weekly checklist, and bag.

NS Vocations Guide for New NSFs

· 5 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Most people ask about vocations the wrong way.

They ask, "Is this vocation good or bad?" when the more useful question is, "How will this posting change my daily life, expectations, and routine?"

That is why new NSFs often get surprised after BMT. The label sounds familiar, but the actual experience depends on much more than the vocation name alone.

A group of soldiers from different vocations standing together

Saving Money During NS

· 5 min read
NSVault Editorial Team
Practical guides for Singapore NSFs and NSMen

Most NSFs do not struggle with money because they have zero discipline. They struggle because small spending leaks feel harmless in the moment.

One Grab ride here, one delivery order there, one tired weekend impulse purchase, one "I deserve it" canteen run that turns into a pattern. None of it looks dramatic by itself, but together they quietly eat the part of your allowance that could have become real savings.

The good news is that NS also gives you a structure that can make saving easier if you use it properly.

A piggy bank with coins being inserted